Frank Lloyd Wright

Paper $24.95ISBN: 9781861892683
Published
June 2006
For sale in North and South America only

A cultural icon who defined the twentieth-century American landscape, Frank Lloyd Wright has been studied from what seems to be every possible angle. While many books focus on his works, torrid personal life, or both, few solely consider his professional persona, as a man enmeshed in a web of prominent public figures and political ideas. In this new biography, Robert McCarter distills Wright’s life and work into a concise account that explores the beliefs and relationships so powerfully reflected in his architectural works.

McCarter examines here how Wright aspired to influence America’s evolving democratic society by the challenges his buildings posed to traditional views of private and public space. He investigates Wright’s relationships with key leaders of art, industry, and society, and how their views came to have concrete significance in Wright’s work and writings. Wright argued that architecture should be the “background or framework” for daily life, not the “object,” and McCarter dissects how and why he aspired to this and other ideals, such as his belief in the ethical duty of architects to improve society and culture.

A penetrating study of the foremost pioneer in modern architecture, Frank Lloyd Wright offers a fascinating biographical chronicle that reveals the principles and relationships at the base of Wright’s production.

"This architectural biography of Wright seeks to define the ethical framework beneath a diverse body of work with a wide range of formal expression. McCarter reveals America's preeminent modern architect as a humanist of democratic ideals whose highest concern was the space of inhabitation for both the individual and the community. For these principles, and for his endless experimentation within building traditions, Wright remains an inspiration."

Steven Litt | ARTnews

"An elegantly written biography for Reaktion's 'Critical Lives' series. . . . Writing in succinct prose devoid of academic jargon, McCarter explains what made Wright’s architecture so revolutionary. . . . While acknowledging Wright’s greatness, McCarter has not written a hagiography. . . . McCarter’s book could have been half as long again; it’s that much of a pleasure to read."

For more information, or to order this book, please visit http://www.press.uchicago.edu